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Stocks fall as investors focus on US stimulus, Brexit talks

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Major US indices retreated from records set Thursday as markets awaited resolution of talks on another relief package for the US economy

Global stock markets retreated on Friday along with the pound, as investors focused on long-running United States stimulus talks on Capitol Hill and whether Britain and the European Union (EU) can finally agree to a post-Brexit trade deal.

Major US indices pulled back from records set Thursday as markets awaited resolution of congressional talks on another relief package for the coronavirus-ravaged US economy.

Lawmakers have said negotiations are in the homestretch, but there was still no deal on Friday evening ahead of a midnight deadline to avert a government shutdown.

While there’s a lot of optimism about stimulus, it’s important not to count on it, said TD Ameritrade’s JJ Kinahan in a note on Friday morning. It’s easy to see things going south and the market taking it pretty hard, with so much stimulus premium already built in. Hope for the best, but prepare for the worst, as the saying goes.

Republicans and Democrats braced for possibly working through the weekend to conclude a $900-billion deal aimed at providing emergency relief for millions of struggling families and businesses amid signs of a worsening economy and as the country sees record high death tolls from the coronavirus pandemic.

Still, many analysts remain hopeful.

While the stimulus saga is still not over, the two sides will likely strike a deal before the end of the year, said Gorilla Trades strategist Ken Berman.

Meanwhile, British and EU negotiators took their gruelling quest for a post-Brexit trade deal into the weekend after failing again on Friday to resolve the highly charged issue of fishing rights.

The pound was under pressure, while bourses in Paris, Frankfurt, and London all fell.

This week ends just like last week with the market focused on an apparent Sunday deadline to approve a Brexit deal, remarked AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould.

Sterling has fallen “as government ministers and Boris Johnson himself have appeared to pour cold water on the prospects of a deal,” said Mould.

Overall though investors are seeing this as bluster intended to enable the UK side to claim victory in the negotiations assuming an agreement is eventually brokered, he added.

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